My Lords, I will speak to first three amendments in this group, but I support the others.
The office of the Health Services Safety Investigations Body is vital. It has the capacity to make the step change in patient safety that Parliament has been asking for on a regular basis, over many years. Amendment 308 makes it clear that it is vital that there needs to be scrutiny of the appointment of the chair and the chief investigator by Parliament. The history, outlined by the noble Lord, Lord Hunt, but also in the amendments your Lordships’ House has considered during the course of the Bill, arises very much out of the recent F irst Do No Harm report, which the noble Baroness, Lady Cumberlege, led. This was a recommendation, as the noble Lord, Lord Hunt, said, of the Joint Select Committee, pre 2019. It emphasises the public scrutiny of these appointments, the importance of the HSSIB and the fact that it must fulfil its duty to the best of its ability and be very much in the public eye.
Amendment 308A talks about financial stability over a period of years. It is all too easy for new bodies being set up by the Government to have a one-year budget. I am thinking, just as an example of the moment, about the position the public health budget has been in, where there is no stability at all. Quite often, in March, health bodies find out exactly what they will get to start the next financial year in April. Let us not do that with the HSSIB. Let us give it a three-year plan for financial stability.
Amendment 309 is vital if the HSSIB is going to succeed. It has to have adequate funds and resources to carry out one of its core roles—that of investigation.
I also echo the concerns of the noble Lord, Lord Hunt, about coroners, and support the amendments in the name of the noble Baroness, Lady Young.